
Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro ordered his government on Friday to slash the budget of his oil-dependent and economically-weak nation, as crude prices plunge after OPEC held output steady.
The leftist leader called for a "substantial reduction" of the salaries of senior government officials, from state firms to ministries and his own wages.
Oil prices have fallen by a third in the second half of this year, hitting government revenue in an indebted nation that gets 96 percent of its hard currency from oil sales.
"I have ordered a set of cuts in the nation's budget," Maduro, whose country has faced shortages of basic goods and high inflation, said during an event with public servants.
Maduro said his economy minister, Rodolfo Marco Torre, would travel to China to "deepen economic and financing agreements" that would help Venezuela cover the oil revenue shortfall.
Venezuela, a member of the 12-nation Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries with the world's largest proven oil reserves, had urged the cartel to lower production in order to make oil prices rise.
But Saudi Arabia and other Gulf monarchies refused.
OPEC opted Thursday to maintain its collective output ceiling at 30 million barrels per day, where it has stood for three years, despite oversupply, sending prices plunging.
Analysts have warned prices could yet fall further.
US benchmark West Texas Intermediate for delivery in January closed at $66.15 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange, down $7.54 from the closing price Wednesday. It was the lowest WTI close since September 2009.
The NYMEX was closed Thursday for a holiday.
As the New York market closed in an abbreviated session Friday, in London, Brent oil for January delivery sank below $70 for the first time in four and a half years, to $69.78 a barrel. Brent settled at $70.15 a barrel, down $2.43 from Thursday's close.
Maduro said Venezuela "firmly" believes that oil prices should not be lower than $100.
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